Opinion No. Oag 20-86, (1986)

75 Op. Att'y Gen. 100
CourtWisconsin Attorney General Reports
DecidedJune 20, 1986
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Op. Att'y Gen. 100 (Opinion No. Oag 20-86, (1986)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. Oag 20-86, (1986), 75 Op. Att'y Gen. 100 (Wis. 1986).

Opinion

WILLIAM J. GROGAN, District Attorney Outagamie County

You have requested my opinion regarding change of venue in juvenile delinquency cases to effect cost sharing between two or more counties where, by statute, venue could properly lie in either county. Your specific questions are: (1) Is it lawful in a juvenile delinquency proceeding for a court to grant a motion for a change of venue after adjudication but before the first dispositional hearing provided that a basis exists for venue in either county; and (2) Is it lawful for parties by agreement to stipulate to a transfer of venue after adjudication but before the first dispositional hearing?

It is my opinion that section 48.185, Stats., the Juvenile Code provision on venue, does not authorize a change of venue after adjudication but before the first dispositional hearing, either upon motion of a party or upon stipulation by the parties.

You ask this question because you are concerned about the following scenario. A crime is committed in county A by a juvenile who resides in county B. Under section 48.185, venue can exist in either county A or county B. If county A initiates juvenile delinquency proceedings, and the juvenile is ultimately placed under a dispositional order, county A is liable for the costs of prosecution as well as the costs resulting from the dispositional order. You seek a method for ensuring that the county of residence of the juvenile will share some of the cost by shifting venue from county A to county B after adjudication and before the first dispositional hearing.

Section 46.26 (4)(a) provides that the Department of Health and Social Services shall bill counties or deduct from statutory allocations to counties for the costs of care, services and supplies purchased or provided by the department for each person receiving services under section 48.34. Section 48.34 establishes all of the disposition alternatives for a child adjudged delinquent. Section 46.26 (4)(b) provides that liability for such care, services and supplies *Page 101 shall apply to the county public welfare or social service departments established by designated statutes "in the county of the court exercising jurisdiction under ch. 48 for each person receiving department services under ss. 48.34 . . . ."

Section 48.185 currently provides as follows:

Venue. (1) Venue for any proceeding under ss. 48.12, 48.125, 48.13, 48.135, 48.14 and 48.18 may be in any of the following: the county where the child resides, the county where the child is present or, in the case of a violation of a state law or a county, town or municipal ordinance, the county where the violation occurred. Venue for proceedings brought under subch. VIII is as provided in this subsection except where the child has been placed and is living outside the home of the child's parent pursuant to a dispositional order, in which case venue is as provided in sub. (2).

(2) Venue for any proceeding under s. 48.363 or 48.365, or under subch. VIII when the child has been placed outside the home pursuant to a dispositional order under s. 48.345, shall be in the county where the dispositional order was issued, unless the child's county of residence has changed, or the parent of the child has resided in a different county of this state for 6 months. In either case, the court may, upon a motion and for good cause shown, transfer the case, along with all appropriate records, to the county of residence of the child or parent.

Under section 48.185(1), jurisdiction of a delinquency proceeding may be had in the county where the child is present or the county where the violation of law occurred. The statute does not state how the counties are to decide which of them shall assert jurisdiction when the county of residence, presence and violation are not the same.

Section 48.185 provides for a change of venue for subsequent dispositions, that is revisions or extensions of the original order. Under subsection (2), venue for any proceeding under sections 48.363 (revision) or 48.365 (extension) shall be in the county where the dispositional order was issued, but the court, upon a motion and for good cause shown, may transfer the case to the county of residence of the child or parent if the child's county of residence has changed or the parent has resided in a different county of the state for six months. *Page 102

By its own terms, section 48.185 makes no provision for change of venue except in the limited circumstances described in section48.185(2), i.e., for a revision or extension of an existing order. In order to interpret the statute to authorize a change of venue from the county where the crime was committed to the county of the child's residence for the purpose of cost-sharing, I would have to find some indication that the Legislature intended to allow such a change of venue upon motion or by stipulation.

I am unable to discern such intent on the part of the Legislature. Reading sections 48.185 and 46.26 together, it is apparent that the county which accepts jurisdiction and prosecutes a delinquency action which culminates in a dispositional order under section 48.34 shall be liable to the department for all costs associated with such a dispositional order. There is nothing in the legislative history of sections48.185 or 46.26 that suggests that distribution of costs between counties was of concern to the Legislature in the question of venue.

Prior to 1955, there was no specific venue provision in the predecessor to the Children's Code, The Chapter on Child Protection and Reformation. Venue apparently was in the county of the child's residence, with the county where the child was present, if different, having concurrent venue. Sec. 48.01(5), Stats. (1953). In 1955, section 48.16, the first section specifically dealing with venue, was created to read as follows:

VENUE. Venue for any proceeding under ss. 48.12 and 48.13 shall be in any of the following: the county where the child resides, the county where he is present or, in the case of a violation of a state law or a county, town or municipal ordinance, the county where the violation occurred.

Chapter 364, Laws of 1977, made the following change:

SECTION 28. 48.16 of the statutes is renumbered 48.185 and amended to read:

48.185 Venue. Venue for any proceeding under ss. 48.12 [and]*, 48.125, 48.13,[shall]* 48.135, 48.14 and 48.18 may be in any of the following: the county where the child resides, the county where [he]* the child is present or, in the case of a violation of a state law or a county, town or municipal ordinance, the county where the violation occurred. Venue for any proceeding under s. 48.363 or 48.365

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